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Skeletal muscle is the most abundant tissue in the human body and serves as the primary amino acid pool for the body when it needs it (e.g., under stress conditions like dieting, heavy training, injury, etc.).

Over the years there has been great interest in understanding the pathways that mediate muscle wasting under stress conditions and research indicates that hyper-expression of myostatin is a modulates this response. In the most basic sense, myostatin inhibits the body's ability increase muscularity.

Glutamine is the most abundant amino acid found in skeletal muscle and is depleted during and after heavy physical stress. Over several years there have been anecdotal reports on the benefits of
glutamine supplementation for muscle growth, however scientific data supporting mechanisms of action have been conflicting.

Recent experimental evidence indicates that the muscle sparing and anabolic effects of glutamine supplementation may be due to its ability to inhibit
myostatin, enabling greater muscle growth. In this study, published in Amino Acids, researchers from the University of Torino (in Italy) showed that when muscle cells were exposed to TNF (to induce catabolism) and supplemented with glutamine, it completely reversed the hyperactivity of myostatin (and halted catabolism).